Meet Felton Newell and the Dubious L.A. Political Machine Opposing Him

Felton Newell

You have to love politics in all of its gory splendor.  The elected officials, charged with the stewardship of our communities locally and nationally often engage in questionable if not outright criminal behavior.  More times than not, these same individuals maintain office for years if not decades, relying more as time goes by on name recognition and press releases rather than substantive and measurable progress.

Then again, maybe I’m just a cynic.  Maybe…

In February, the venerable Congresswoman Diane Watson announced her

Congresswoman Watson

forthcoming retirement, eventually leaving California’s 33rd congressional district in the hands of someone new.   Her retirement, after a long career of public service was not surprising or unexpected.  What did raise my eyebrow is that in most of those news reports, it was “suggested” her likely successor would be Karen Bass, Speaker Emeritus for the California State Assembly.

Oddly enough, at that time, Bass had not announced her candidacy.  Maybe the press knew something that most of Los Angelenos did not know…meaning, they could predict the future without having yet Bass as a declared candidate or even the primary in June in which to make such a boast.

Maybe…

The Los Angeles Times recorded the moment as follows:

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-watson-retire11-2010feb11,0,5697128.story

“Rep. Diane Watson (D-Los Angeles), a prominent African American politician for more than three decades, plans to announce her retirement from Congress on Thursday, opening her seat for a possible run by termed-out state Assembly Speaker Karen Bass (D-Los Angeles).”

If I have this right, (and I do) the Los Angeles Times “declared” that the Congresswoman “plans to announce her retirement” and that this opens her seat “for a possible run” by Karen Bass.

Speaker Emeritus Bass

Yes, and “maybe” the Lakers will win the championship.  But let’s go ahead and have the playoffs anyway…without outside undue influence corrupting the outcome.  Believe it or not, it’s the right thing to do.

The article went even further acknowledging Bass had no comment on her political future.

So if we turn around and check the tote board, not only had Watson yet to retire and Bass yet to declare; the “news” outlet didn’t even mention the candidate who was already in the race since April of 2009.

Felton Newell.

It eschewed the one inarguable fact for complete speculation.  Well done Los Angeles Times, well done.  Yes, never let the lack of facts get in the way of properly reporting the news.

What “news” was being reported and what due diligence did the outlet do before running the story?  It is not a rhetorical question.  It speaks to the very essence of a political process arguably rife with secret handshakes and backroom deals which brought California and other states to their knees during this recession.

It is not a rhetorical question.

In the aggregation of facts to support a news story on the political future of one of the most prominent congressional districts in California, somehow the Los Angeles Times failed miserably…arguably intentionally.  In any discussion as to the future of the congressional district, it would seem an acknowledgment of someone already in the race would be in order.

More expressly, the “handing off” of a constituency from a retiring congresswoman to a then-undeclared candidate is an implied endorsement by both the congresswoman and the news outlet.  It reeks of dirty pool at best.

At best…

To this end, meet Felton Newell, prosecutor and loyal son of Los Angeles who largely has been flying under the media radar but quite familiar in the community in which he serves.  Today in The Mo’Kelly Report, I take a moment to get the thoughts and perspectives of the one candidate who didn’t declare his candidacy as a result of political opportunity or expediency.

Click HERE for audio interview.

[Stay tuned…the new mrmokelly.com website is coming to you in 2010.  Set your browsers now.]

The Mo’Kelly Report is an entertainment journal with a political slant; published weekly at The Huffington Post and www.eurweb.com.  It is meant to inform, infuse and incite meaningful discourse…as well as entertain. The Mo’Kelly Report is syndicated by Blogburst. For more Mo’Kelly, https://mrmokelly.com.  Mo’Kelly can be reached at [email protected] and he welcomes all commentary.

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2 responses to “Meet Felton Newell and the Dubious L.A. Political Machine Opposing Him”

  1. Zack Avatar

    You so mean for that LA Times dig. You know their crowning achievement was being one of the FIRST to break the news on MJ. And folks wouldn’t even believe them until CNN reported it HOURS LATER.

    1. mrmokelly Avatar

      You're funny Zack and right. The L.A. Times has tried in vain for decades to be newsworthy and relevant. It gets zero respect for the most part. I'm just talking about basic journalism. It benefits from the fact that its the only main paper for L.A. so it gets more eyeballs than most. But in terms of content and integrity…garbage. They haven't had the scandals like the NY Times, but that's because people don't care about the paper enough to check up on it or their stories. They don't matter.